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A screenshot shows the Air Force Officer Training School's official Facebook page after it was hacked, Monday, Oct. 3, 2022.

A screenshot shows the Air Force Officer Training School's official Facebook page after it was hacked, Monday, Oct. 3, 2022. (Facebook)

A hacker took control of the Air Force Officer Training School’s official Facebook page this week, adding a profile picture of a man wearing socks with sandals, changing the page’s status to “permanently closed” and deleting graduation photos.

Staff for the page — which has 22,000 followers and highlights airmen’s progress in an eight-week course for becoming commissioned officers at Maxwell Air Force Base, Ala. — regained control Tuesday morning.

“We're back! It's us! THANK YOU for your patience! We're working to get the deleted posts restored as well as 22-09/10's photos up,” the page’s administrator wrote that morning. “No more socks and sandals though … sorry.”

The footwear of the man in the photo became a hot topic on social media. One commenter pointed out to Reddit’s r/AirForce community that the training school had been “hacked by a man wearing socks with thong split sandals.” Another commenting on the school’s Tuesday post pleaded for admins to “bring back sandal man.”

The page is managed by cadres at the schoolhouse, Air University spokesman Philip Berube told Stars and Stripes by phone Wednesday. The training school did not respond to emailed questions that day.

A screenshot shows the profile photo for the Air Force Officer Training School's Facebook page after it was hacked, Monday, Oct. 3, 2022.

A screenshot shows the profile photo for the Air Force Officer Training School's Facebook page after it was hacked, Monday, Oct. 3, 2022. (Facebook)

The school’s staff consists of full-time active-duty, Air Force Reserve, and Air National Guard members, including 106 officers, 42 enlisted and nine civilian personnel, as well as seven Air Force Reserve officers, according to the Air Force.

Chief Master Sgt. of the Air Force JoAnne Bass referenced the hack Wednesday in a Facebook post highlighting the importance of cyber awareness.

“This is a great reminder to make sure your social media accounts are secured,” she wrote, using a #socksandsandals hashtag. “Glad to see USAF Officer Training School back on their feet.”

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Jonathan Snyder is a reporter at Marine Corps Air Station Iwakuni, Japan. Most of his career was spent as an aerial combat photojournalist with the 3rd Combat Camera Squadron at Lackland Air Force Base, Texas. He is also a Syracuse Military Photojournalism Program and Eddie Adams Workshop alumnus.

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